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Question about military and difficult child
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<blockquote data-quote="skeeter" data-source="post: 464285" data-attributes="member: 439"><p>again - on the medications, it will depend on the branch and what job he strikes for.</p><p></p><p>I would also suggest he talk to all branches of service AND guard. You'll see from my sig line that my son was in the Navy. He went up to the recruiting office (all branches and guard in the same building) one day after high school and just kept going back and forth between them until he got the deal HE wanted. In his case, it was the Navy, but for your son, it may be another branch. Again, the ASVAB is important - it will determine what jobs are open to your son at all.</p><p></p><p>Does your son have any idea what he wants to do in the service? My son had a definite goal of being an air craft mechanic, and refused to be swayed from that goal by the recruiters. They really wanted him to be nuclear but he held out for what he wanted.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="skeeter, post: 464285, member: 439"] again - on the medications, it will depend on the branch and what job he strikes for. I would also suggest he talk to all branches of service AND guard. You'll see from my sig line that my son was in the Navy. He went up to the recruiting office (all branches and guard in the same building) one day after high school and just kept going back and forth between them until he got the deal HE wanted. In his case, it was the Navy, but for your son, it may be another branch. Again, the ASVAB is important - it will determine what jobs are open to your son at all. Does your son have any idea what he wants to do in the service? My son had a definite goal of being an air craft mechanic, and refused to be swayed from that goal by the recruiters. They really wanted him to be nuclear but he held out for what he wanted. [/QUOTE]
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